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Vascular Diseases clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT03631056 Available - Vascular Diseases Clinical Trials

Individual Patient Expanded Access for Human Acellular Vessel (HAV)

Start date: n/a
Phase:
Study type: Expanded Access

Individual patient expanded access requests may be considered for patients who have no other treatment options and are not eligible for an HAV clinical study

NCT ID: NCT02355782 Available - Clinical trials for Thrombotic Microangiopathy

OMS721 Compassionate Use in Patients With Thrombotic Microangiopathy

Start date: n/a
Phase: N/A
Study type: Expanded Access

The purpose of this compassionate use study, for two patients with thrombotic microangiopathy, is to provide expanded access to patients who have participated in the clinical trial OMS721-TMA-001 and in whom improvement in their disease markers was observed while on treatment or to patients who could otherwise benefit from the treatment. This is a treatment protocol; not a research protocol.Therefore, only patients in study OMS721-TMA-001 deemed eligible by the investigator may participate.

NCT ID: NCT00965315 Available - Diabetes Clinical Trials

A Multicenter Randomized Parallel-group Study to Investigate the Efficacy of a Combination of Rosuvastatin and Fenofibrate in the Patients With Diabetes or Atherosclerotic Vascular Diseases With Metabolic Syndrome

Start date: n/a
Phase: N/A
Study type: Expanded Access

Diabetic patients have an excess risk of mortality due to cardiovascular diseases (CVD) compared to non-diabetics. Cardiovascular disease mortality rate is reportedly on the rise in several countries in the region, including urban China, Malaysia, Korea and Taiwan. Cardiovascular diseases and stroke are always the number 2 and 3 killers for Taiwanese population in recent years, and they really cost much from our medical resource. For treating dyslipidemia, one of the major risk factor for CVD, statins have been well documented to reduce CV deaths both for primary and secondary prevention in several large-scale trials. It has been reported that the clinical benefits of treating dyslipidemia in patients with diabetes mellitus should be at least equivalent to the benefits observed among those with cardiovascular disease. A meta-analysis of seven trials of statins found that treatment for about 5 years resulted in a 25% reduction in the combined outcome of coronary heart disease death and non-fatal myocardial infarction. Fibrates are another group of hypolipidemic drugs that regulate lipid metabolism and are used quite often in daily practice for diabetic dyslipidemia, because of its beneficial effect to reduce high TG and increase low HDL-C, which are the characteristic lipid abnormalities commonly seen in the patients with diabetes or metabolic syndrome. However, in recently published FIELD study, fenofibrate did not significantly reduce the risk of the primary outcome of coronary events in 9,795 participants with type 2 diabetes mellitus. The higher rate of starting statin therapy in patients allocated placebo might have masked a moderately larger treatment benefit. Furthermore, all the treatment trials to back up the lipid treatment guideline were conducted in Caucasians and no data about the combination therapy with fibrate and statin was published before.